Tax Issue In Conversion of S-Corporation To Limited Liability Company

Limited liability companies are generally better asset protection entities than corporation. A judgment debtor can levy upon the debtor's stock in a corporation and in the case of a small corporation possibly stop the corporation business and liquidate corporate assets. In the case of a debtor's limited liability company interest the judgment creditor's remedy is limited to a lien on distributions, if any, and the creditor cannot stop the LLC operations or force the sale of the LLC's assets. In the past, the corporation, and particularly Sub-S corporations, were the most common business entity for closely held small business. When owners of small corporations become concerned about asset protection they often want to convert their S corporations to LLCs, possibly LLCs taxed as S corporations for tax purposes.

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Can Creditor Garnish Alimony And Support Payment Owed To Divorced Debtor?

I dealt with an interesting question today about alimony and support questions. Sometimes people ask me if there are asset protection tools to guard against awards for payment of alimony or support (generally, the answer is "no") or what types of assets are vulnerable to enforce family court judgments. Today's issue was different. A divorced woman was facing a large civil judgment. The divorce court awarded the woman alimony, and her ex-husband sent her monthly alimony checks. The woman depended upon the alimony to pay her basic costs of living. She wanted to know if a judgment creditor could garnish the alimony payments from the ex-husband.

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Deed From Husband To Himself And Wife Creates Entireties Ownership Per Florida Statute

Tenancy by entireties ownership requires certain characteristics. One requirement is that husband and wife must acquire their interest in the entireties asset simultaneously. For instance, suppose a single man has a bank account. He gets married, and after marriage he adds his wife's name to the account as a co-owner (not just an authorized signer). The account is not an entireties account because the husband and wife acquired their interests in the account at a different time and the man opened the account before being married. This week I encountered an exception to the rule about simultaneous ownership of entireties property. In this instance, my client purchased primary residence when he was single. After marriage deeded the property from his name to him and his wife jointly. The property exceeded ½ acre within a city so did not qualify for homestead protection. The issue was whether the residence could be considered a tenancy by entireties asset when the husband and wife did not acquire their interest at the same time in the same deed.

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Tenants By Entireties Does Not Depend Upon Florida Residency

"Assets owned jointly by married Florida residents is exempt from the individual judgment creditors of either spouse because the joint assets are owned tenants by the entireties." Most people consider the foregoing sentence to be a correct principal of Florida law. The sentence is true, but it is also misleading. The issue is that the quote suggests that tenancy by entireties is an "exemption" applicable to "Florida residents" and the quote does not consider the nature or location of property in question. Actually, tenants by entireties is not a Florida creditor "exemption." Florida exemptions from creditor levy and in bankruptcy proceedings are set forth in Chapter 222 of Florida statutes. These statutory exemptions are applicable only to Florida residents. Tenancy by the entireties is not a statutory exemption; is a principal established by the traditions of Florida case law. Florida residency is not a prerequisite for tenants by entireties protection. More specifically, you do not have to be a Florida resident to enjoy the protection of jointly owned real property (land) or tangible personal property under the entireties umbrella if the same assets are situated in the state of Florida.

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Size Of Municipal Homestead Lot Partly Under Water

Your house in a municipality is homestead provided the lot is no larger than ½ acre. If the city homestead lot is greater than ½ acre the protection is applied pro rata. For example, for a lot 1 acre in size within a city only 50% of the equity is protected as homestead. This week I spoke with a man who lived on a lake front lot in the city. The lot was barely over ½ acre. The lot survey showed that the side lot lines extended several feet into the lake so that a significant part of the lot was under the lake. The dry land was less than ½ acre in size. The man asked me if the part of the lot under the lake counted toward the calculation of his homestead exemption.

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Finding An Offshore Bank For Your Asset Protection Plan

Foreign bank accounts are an integral part of offshore asset protection. Clients who establish limited liability companies or corporations in foreign jurisdictions for asset protection frequent ask where and how their entities can set up a foreign bank account. This past week I visited an executive manager of a well-established offshore trust company that assists asset protection for U.S. citizens. The company serves as manager of foreign LLCs or as trustee of foreign trusts. The manager told me that the offshore banking environment has changed significantly in the past year or two as the IRS has cracked down on banks that have maintained secret bank accounts for U.S. taxpayers.

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